Abstract
The end of the nineteenth century saw the Balkans animated with cultural movements and socio-political turmoil. Alongside these developments, the proliferation of print media and the arrival of moving images was transforming urban life and played a significant role in the creation of national culture. <br><br>Based on archival research and previously overlooked footage and early press materials, this book is the first study on early cinema in the region from a transnational and cross-cultural perspective. The work investigates how the unique geopolitical positioning of the Balkan space and the multi-cultural identity of its communities influenced and shaped visual culture and early cinema development. Moreover, it examines the relationship between the new medium and visual culture through the notion of the haptic, and explores the role early cinema and foreign productions played in the construction of Balkanist and semi-colonial discourses. <br><br>Reframing hierarchical relations between ‘centres’ and ‘peripheries’, this book departs from approaches such as ‘new cinema history’ and ‘vernacular modernity’ to counter modernity discourses of ‘lacks and absences’, and instead, establishes new connections between moving image and print artefacts, early film practitioners and intellectuals, the socio-cultural context and cultural responses to the new visual medium.
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